Books by "Richard J. Aldrich"

6 books found

The Agricultural Research Center of the United States Department of Agriculture

The Agricultural Research Center of the United States Department of Agriculture

by Bertha Francis Olsen, Harry Hutchinson Stage, Richard Jay Foote, Karl August Fox, Willard Wilson Yates, Claude M. Gjullin

1956

An Illustrated History of the State of Iowa

An Illustrated History of the State of Iowa

by Charles Richard Tuttle

1876

Copyright, Its History and Its Law

Copyright, Its History and Its Law

by Richard Rogers Bowker

1912 · London : Constable

Secret History

Secret History

by Steven Loveridge, Richard S. Hill

2023 · Auckland University Press

In 1900, a handful of New Zealand police detectives watched out for spies, seditionists and others who might pose a threat to state and society. The Police Force remained the primary instrument of such human intelligence in New Zealand until 1956 when, a decade into the Cold War, a dedicated Security Service was created. Over the same period, New Zealand' s role within signals intelligence networks evolved from the Imperial Wireless Chain to the UKUSA intelligence alliance (now known as Five Eyes). The first of two volumes chronicling the history of state surveillance in New Zealand, Secret History opens up the ' secret world' of security intelligence through to 1956. It is the story of the surveillers who – in times of war and peace, turmoil and tranquillity – monitored and analysed perceived threats to national interests. It is also the story of the surveilled: those whose association with organisations and movements led to their public and private lives being documented in secret files. Secret History explores a hidden and intriguing dimension of New Zealand history, one which sits uneasily with cherished national notions of an exceptionally fair and open society.

The Black Door: Spies, Secret Intelligence and British Prime Ministers

The Black Door: Spies, Secret Intelligence and British Prime Ministers

by Richard Aldrich, Rory Cormac

2016 · HarperCollins UK

The Black Door explores the evolving relationship between successive British prime ministers and the intelligence agencies, from Asquith’s Secret Service Bureau to Cameron’s National Security Council.